How Brett Brown and the Sixers have been playing brilliantly with a 'blowtorch'

How Brett Brown and the Sixers have been playing brilliantly with a 'blowtorch'

Brett Brown and the Sixers would, without a doubt, prefer for each of their seven wins this season to have been blowouts.

But the Sixers' head coach acknowledged Tuesday night after Tobias Harris found Joel Embiid for a dunk to put the Sixers on top of the Cavaliers with 13.2 seconds to play, Kevin Love missed an open three-pointer and the clock expired following a mad scramble for the loose rebound that he gets some pleasure from the tight finishes.

“We've had a ton of close games,” he said after the 98-97 win (see observations). “I mean, we really have. I sadistically love it. I do because we spent so much time on situations over our days here.”

During training camp, Brown dedicated ample time to sideline and baseline out of bounds plays, scenarios in which his team might need a two or a three, and a variety of other late-game possibilities. He recognized the importance of “mastering vanilla,” as he likes to say — nailing down the basics with his new team — but he also wanted to start tinkering early.

I play with stuff,” he said on Oct. 4. “I’ll go in and run something 10 times in a row and just keeping doing it, and then I’ll move people around, and then I’ll change the angle and play with it. You have a base that you think you want to work with, and then you maneuver within that. What goes into deciding what is the base? Thirty-five years of coaching, 20 years of coaching in the NBA, gut feel, a little bit of analytics and just sort of inherent curiosity. You know what I think about plays in general. Because with the creativity of coaches nowadays where you can come out and they could be sitting in a zone, they could switch one through four, keep five at home, sag the inbounder, pressure the inbounder. There’s just so many things that you’re seeing.

And to feel like you’re going to come out with all the answers is really not smart. And so for me, I like to just put them in an environment — and that’s the word, an environment. Then they’ve got to choose different options out of it. That’s the mentality when you’re talking about 'need' plays, ATOs, catch shot down three, catch shot down two, need two with time, all that stuff.

Already, Brown has created three “evrironments” that have produced game-winning baskets or free throws. Al Horford’s screen freed Furkan Korkmaz in the right corner against the Trail Blazers.

And Tuesday night, Embiid set a ball screen for Josh Richardson at the right elbow after Ben Simmons' inbounds pass. As Richardson probed for an opening, Embiid rolled toward the rim, then set a strong down screen for Tobias Harris. That flowed into a perfectly executed high-low — similar to the one that led to Embiid’s game-winning free throws on Oct. 28 in Atlanta.

“Great play call by coach,” Embiid said. “Great drawn play, and we did the rest. Great pass by Tobias, and I was wide open.”

If the offensive foul call on Embiid in Denver Friday night had instead been judged a defensive foul on Nikola Jokic — as the NBA’s Last Two Minute Report said it should have been — Brown might very well have had four game-winning out of bounds plays in 10 games.

Still, there’s an element of luck at play for teams that put themselves in those situations over and over again, as Richardson acknowledged.

“You’re going to win some of those, hopefully more than you lose,” he said. “But I understand the NBA — it’s hard to win. There are going to be some of those games where we don’t come out on top. But for me, I think it’s good for us to experience this, because in the playoffs when things slow down, when things get tough, we’ve got a good foundation to lean on.”

As much as he enjoys the challenge of those spots and feels equipped to handle them, Brown gave a very colorful, affirmative answer when asked if his team is playing with fire.

“It is a blowtorch,” he said. “And it is violent. It's a really big one. You're just watching the game unfold and you can't make some of that up. And I'm the coach, and so I gotta figure it out. But some of those turnovers certainly were head-scratching. I do give our guys credit for not crumbling. I think that we knew if we had to do anything, we better play defense, and defense we played. I liked the way that we defended, especially down the stretch. I don't think they scored in the last three minutes.”

The Sixers’ next four games are against the 3-7 Magic, 4-7 Thunder, 4-6 Cavs and dysfunctional, 2-9 Knicks. Brown will hope he can wait a while before again being faced with the exhilarating responsibility of putting his team in a fruitful late-game environment.

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Philadelphians on Saturday flooded the streets in protest of racism and police brutality following the death of George Floyd last week. The sheer volume of the protesters was powerful.

Thousands of people in Philadelphia continue to protest racism and police brutality following the death of George Floyd. Crowds in Center City stretched from the steps of the Art Museum and past the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. https://t.co/LlmPCHjz7Qpic.twitter.com/6YJT2DvCW7

Among those in attendance were Sixers forward Tobias Harris, who recently penned a strong personal essay on acknowledging and addressing systems of racism, rookie Mattise Thybulle, and general manager Elton Brand.

The Sixers shared several photos and video from the protest on social media. Thybulle and Brand wore shirts with the words “I can’t breathe!,” which Floyd said as police officer George Chauvin was kneeling on his neck, and which Eric Garner said in 2014 as he was being choked by NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo.

Harris’ shirt had the face of civil rights leader Malcolm X on it and the phrases “No sell out!” and “By any means necessary!” Thybulle held up signs that said, “Vote” and “We all have a voice — use it.”

The Sixers organization standing behind those protesting and actively seeking to amplify their voices is significant. The team on Saturday also retweeted a post by Glenn Robinson III with information about a fundraising campaign that his non-profit organization, Angels Are Real Indeed (ARI), is launching.

“That was something I was very, very nervous about,” she said. “What way can I do it where I’m not actually distracting from the protests? My goal was not to distract from the protests. My goal is to amplify it and show the positive sides of things, because right now I feel like they’re sharing a lot of negatives, like rioting and looting, but there’s also a lot of peaceful protesting going on.”

You can watch Ergemlidze’s interview with Farzetta in the video above.